J, I'm sure your efforts were appreciated. But that card is really old now. It can still run e.g. Einstein, but you'd save money buy replacing it with e.g. a much faster GTX750/Ti, which uses only 1/2 to 1/3 the electricity. Unless you don't have to pay anything for electricity, of course.

J, I'm sure your efforts were appreciated. But that card is really old now. It can still run e.g. Einstein, but you'd save money buy replacing it with e.g. a much faster GTX750/Ti, which uses only 1/2 to 1/3 the electricity. Unless you don't have to pay anything for electricity, of course.

Not only that but the 750Ti is twice as fast, so you'd be getting 4 to 6 times the credits/watt. You'd also have 4 times the video memory. Sell the old card, replace it with a 750Ti and it probably wouldn't take long to pay for itself. You'd also have a cooler running, faster system. I know that sometimes it's hard to shell out that initial investment, but the long term benefits are considerable. On sale you can sometimes pick up the fastest EVGA OCed models for around $110.

Fermi generation of Excellent Tesla is not support ?
I am considering whether to buy a cheap Tesla.

I wouldn't buy a Tesla for GPUGRID. The normal GPUs are faster, cheaper and have newer technology. Teslas have a niche but not here. Instead get a newer Maxwell based GPU that meets your budget: 750, 750Ti, 970, or 980.

Fermi generation of Excellent Tesla is not support ?
I am considering whether to buy a cheap Tesla.

Fermi is still supported by GPU-Grid and Folding. The Teslas are just the same chip, so also supported. But, as Beyond already said, never buy a Tesla for BOINC, not even a cheap one! Fermi is not only outdated by now, but lags Kepler and especially Maxwell significantly in energy efficiency - be it on a Geforce or a Tesla. If a Tesla is cheap, that because it's not worth much any more compared to other cards.

CeDriCXD wrote:

bad news for me. i have 2 gtx295... :(

Personally I wouldn't crunch on anything older than Keplers by now. Your card is more efficient than the GTX9800+ mentioned before, but it's still the generation before Fermi.

In terms of compute capability and performance/Watt anything before a GTX400 series GPU is like trying to crunch with a hot fossil.
You simply can't expect to advance science if you crunch with dark ages technology; everything that could be done pretty much was.

Don't feel obligated to crunch on new kit however, upgrade as and when you choose and contribute if and when you choose - it's your choice.
We experienced crunchers, mods and researchers just give free expert advice to people with a common interest - take it or leave it.
____________FAQ's

There are still projects that continue to offer work for older GPUs, like Seti@Home, Einstein@Home, etc. Please consider attaching to other projects, to keep donating that GPU time, even if it is an old GPU.

I have twin GTX570's on water cooling and haven't gotten any new work in a couple weeks at least. IS there something going on here I haven't heard about?

Looking at your computer's detailed info, I see that the BOINC manager couldn't recognize the GPU (so called coprocessor) at all. It could be caused by that you've installed the BOINC manager as a system service (it's called "protected application execution" in the installer).